Scope of force majeure exemption:
1. Natural disasters: such as earthquakes, floods, typhoons, tsunamis, blizzards, mudslides, etc. These disasters are unpredictable and highly destructive. The company cannot avoid their occurrence, nor can it overcome their impact in a short period of time.
2. Government actions: including bans, regulatory measures, expropriation, and requisitions issued by the government. For example, the government implements measures such as city closures, traffic restrictions, and bans on the export of specific products for public health and safety reasons, or requisitions the company's production site for urban planning purposes, resulting in the company being unable to perform its foreign trade processing contracts normally.
3. Social abnormal events: such as war, armed conflict, strikes, riots, terrorist activities, etc. These events will seriously disrupt social order and economic activities, making it impossible for the company's production and operation to proceed normally. For example, a war breaks out in the area where the company is located, traffic is interrupted, raw materials cannot be transported in, and finished products cannot be transported out, resulting in the inability to deliver goods on time.
4. Public health events: such as large-scale infectious disease outbreaks. When the outbreak is serious, the government may take prevention and control measures such as restricting the movement of people and suspending work and production, which may result in the company being unable to start production or goods being unable to be transported, thus affecting the performance of the contract.